C#: Oracle Data Type Equivalence with OracleDbType C#: Oracle Data Type Equivalence with OracleDbType oracle oracle

C#: Oracle Data Type Equivalence with OracleDbType


Here's a method to convert C# types to the most common OracleDbTypes

private static OracleDbType GetOracleDbType(object o) {  if (o is string) return OracleDbType.Varchar2;  if (o is DateTime) return OracleDbType.Date;  if (o is Int64) return OracleDbType.Int64;  if (o is Int32) return OracleDbType.Int32;  if (o is Int16) return OracleDbType.Int16;  if (o is sbyte) return OracleDbType.Byte;  if (o is byte) return OracleDbType.Int16;    -- <== unverified  if (o is decimal) return OracleDbType.Decimal;  if (o is float) return OracleDbType.Single;  if (o is double) return OracleDbType.Double;  if (o is byte[]) return OracleDbType.Blob;  return OracleDbType.Varchar2;}

Also, for very large character data values, you may want to use OracleDbType.Clob.


The values of the OracleDbType Enumeration are defined in the documentation. Read the ODP for .NET Developer's Guide.

With regards to choosing between Int16, Int32 and Int64, they are all supposed to work. Choose the one which matches the expected size of your .Net variable: Int16 for values between -32768 and 32767, Int32 for values between -2147483648 and 2147483647, and Int64 for anything larger. There appear to be some funnies relating to converting Ints and PL/SQL data types. Check this blog post by Mark Williams.


Coda

Greetings from 2021. This post has just been upvoted, so presumably Seekers are still finding it and finding it useful. But please note that it is more than ten years old. Consequently the advice it offers may not be relevant for more recent versions of ODP, particularly regarding unusual behaviour. Please don't follow recommendations without verifying them for yourself. (This is general advice which holds for anything you read on the Internet, and not just about software development!)

Here is the pertinent link for Oracle 21c ODP documentation.


Check APC's links out, they are what you are looking for : the mapping is quite straightforward according to the name of the enumeration.

But as you began to notice, there is something tricky about integers. Here is my mapping :

  • Int16 : NUMBER(5).
  • Int32 : NUMBER(10).
  • Int64 : NUMBER(19).

The thing is that if you call GetInt64 on a NUMBER(38) column, you will get an exception even if the value is in the correct range...